While combinations of cards aren't limited to just two—there's some truly convoluted chains out there that would make Rube Goldberg proud—the most essential version is; taking two cards that work in harmony to dominate a situation is the poster child for deck synergy: A plus B equals cool.

And when I asked you for your favorite two-card contraptions you answered in droves. Of course, not all combos are born alike, and your answers showed the range of what combos really mean. If you want to supercharge your Commander decks with the biggest and best in the game, you'll find plenty of fodder to use today.

Win and In

Of all the combos in Magic, one is the fiercest above all others: the instant win.

Two cards, either innocuous or powerful on their own, combine into victory for the controller. These are the flashiest of combos and highlight the divide between players who play to win and those who play to win.

They were also among the fewest, categorically speaking, of combo types sent in. I'll let you speak for how they work.

My favorite deck features Gisela as my commander, and tries to one-shot people. The most effective combo I can do with this involves Gisela as the commander swinging in for damage, and a bloodrush Wrecking Ogre. If she goes unblocked, 32 commander damage is pretty fantastic.

—Brian

And if she is blocked, it will take more than 11 points of toughness to stop her.

My favorite two-card combo is straight out of my Radha, Heir to Keld ramp deck. Hellkite Charger either enchanted with Bear Umbra or equipped with Sword of Feast and Famine for infinite attack steps (assuming sufficient lands). I know infinite combos are frowned upon in some Commander groups but my mine tends to feature a lot of mass board wipes and other players able to combo out, so being able to take out the person who's recurring Child of Alara or who has thirty cards in hand is a handy trick. Generally only after a couple of hours' play, though.

My favorite two-card Commander combo is the much-dreaded Niv-Mizzet, the Firemind + Curiosity. I add some redundancy to the combo by using Scion of the Ur-Dragon as a commander and use it to copy Niv-Mizzet when I'm going for the kill, and by using also Keen Sense as a second copy of Curiosity. It's not infinite, since I need a card in deck for each point of damage I will deal, but it almost always at least kills one opponent.

—Jose

Drawing your library while pinging away at players (or their creatures) is something I remember fearing when I learned about Commander years ago. Some combos never change.

Value City

Some combos don't win the game on the spot, but they still feel powerful.

Two cards can lift a player up and provide a platform to build out dominance in a game. These may not be as snazzy as one-shot wins, but left alone they will lead one to victory nonetheless.

There were plenty to choose from among the submissions you shared.

My GW Pauper Commander deck (Sir Shandlar of Eberyn) has a two-card infinite Elf combo, by enchanting Midnight Guard with Presence of Gond. It's slow and easily disrupted, but no one outside of my play group sees it coming! I always get interesting looks when it happens, too!

—John

Just making any amount of something you want is a good way to go for a win, but it still takes the next step of adding another card (or turn) to do it.

Without a doubt: Phyrexia's Core and Spine of Ish Sah. I hear destroying permanents is pretty good. I heard it's even better when you can do it again and again and again. The best part is that both cards are colorless and thus can be put into any deck.

—Andrew

When in doubt, blow things up until the message is clear. (Analogies of poor game politics to poor foreign policy is not accidental.)

If you want a combo that's as likely to take you out with it as everyone else, Repercussion is always a good place to start. It also turns cards like Starstorm and Chain Reaction into deadly all stars.

My favorite two-card Commander combo is Memnarch (as my commander), and Mycosynth Lattice. I steal all the things... Plus, as recently discovered, the added bonus of Mycosynth Lattice allows me to use any of my blue-colorless mana sources to spend mana as any color (without breaking Commander color source rules). So I get to steal your stuff and use it without restriction!!!

If that isn't enough treachery, I then put down a Darksteel Forge and it's all over, if not already!

—Nate

Coming this fall, the new game from Wizards, Grand Theft Battlefield: Commander.

My favorite by far from a game discovered by accident: I have a Deadbridge Chant in play. My grave gets exiled. I play and sacrifice a Mindslaver. Oops.

I'm a fan of social and political play, so shenanigans involving Temple Bell and Mind Over Matter are always amusing to me. The combo itself is pretty versatile, if tricky. If the game has slowed to a glacial crawl, filling your opponent's hands with a few goodies can speed things up. If the math is in your favor, the combo can also provide a win con by making everyone draw their decks; at the very least you'll knock out one or two players. Digging for other combo pieces is also helpful.

My favorite two-card Commander combo would have to Phyrexian Processor and Trostani, Selesnya's Voice. The ability to dump 30 or more life and then gain it all back while making the biggest creature at the table is pure awesomeness. It does a lot you want in Commander, providing life to survive and dudes to punch faces.

The drawback of the combo is that it draws tremendous hate; people fear it, yes, but they're also supremely irritated by it.

—Jared

Seedborn Muse is a longtime standout in multiplayer. Combined with Leyline of Anticipation and other flash-inducing effects, the green Muse easily ranks among the most terrifying cards to face down.

My favorite two-card combo for my Ghost Council deck is Pestilence and Lashknife Barrier. Together, your ability to control the board while not losing a single creature of your own is incredible. Plus, with black and white's lifegain, you can eventually kill all your opponents en masse!

Though I prefer synergies above combos, mine would be Perilous Forays and Roil Elemental in my Horde of Notions Elemental tribal deck. It's a powerful combo, though not overpowered, unanswerable, or infinite. You need to kick it off with playing a land or sacrificing one of your own creatures. But once that's done it's easy enough to steal a creature and throw it away for another land. Clear the board and ramp up to a ridiculous amount of lands.

—Alma

There are two things I always love to do in Commander: clear the battlefield of creatures, and add even more land to my control. This is a combo that does both at once. (In so many words, I'm going to be adding this to something soon!)

My favorite two-card Commander combo is Glissa, the Traitor + Executioner's Capsule. This simple combo plays off Glissa's strengths in a very effective, and often devastating, way. Sac the capsule, something dies, Glissa returns the capsule; repeat for as many times as you have mana, and it's ready to go again next turn.

If your opponent isn't playing black, this can often clear his or her board, removing resources/threats and allowing you, and/or other opponents, to attacks freely. Not the most powerful combo in the game, but very effective nonetheless. Having it ready to go can be a good "rattlesnake" tactic, too, encouraging opponents to attack somewhere else.

—Jeffrey

"Machine-gun combos" like this aren't as common as you might think, but their effect on games is dramatic. These rarely win the game on their own, but the de facto win against decks without ways to break the combo is one good reason to add normally unexciting cards like Krosan Grip or Tormod's Crypt to decks.

I love this combo because it taps/untaps everything infinitely, including everyone else's permanents. The catch is it only works during upkeep. It's great to help people and easy to use to combo off with things like Eye of Ugin. The pieces alone are also great: Resonator is nuts and Sands is an obscure card that messes with combat but is like a Seedborn Muse for everyone. I use it in my Glissa, the Traitor deck and it's been great.

—James

I think Rings of Brighthearth and Basalt Monolith is the best to card combo. Being able to go infinite with your colorless manager opens up many extreme ways to kill your opponent.

If you can find a way to use any amount of mana you want, these are combos for you. Comet Storm is my favorite way to blow everything away.

My favorite two-card combo in my Jor Kadeen, the Prevailer deck is Moltensteel Dragon and Soul Conduit. I attack with Moltensteel Dragon, spend all but my last one or two life points on its firebreathing ability, then swap my life total with whomever has the most life. This will deal a huge chunk of damage to two opponents at once. And then I can do it again next turn.

It's not quite an instant-win, but this combo has the potential to wipe out an entire table very quickly if someone doesn't have an answer for it.

I've used this combo myself, and my preferred targets were Tithe and Boros Charm. More land or indestructible creatures were definitely handy, too.

Lurking Predators + Cream of the Crop: Every time an enemy plays a spell (which is a lot in Commander), I get a free creature and then search the top for the next creature to play. With "enter the battlefield" effects, this gets extra silly.

My favorite two-card combo for Commander is Deadeye Navigator and Coiling Oracle. I run the combo in any deck that runs blue and green for that extra boost of ramp slash card draw. Plus the Deadeye Navigator can bounce around to be used with other "enter the battlefield" effects.

—Tory

See previous comment. (This is another favorite combo I've used myself.)

In answer to your question about a two-card combo in Commander, I would like to tell you about my favorite Commander deck: It's Zirilan of the Claw mono-red from Mirage.

I've been throwing Dragons at people for years now, and it's super fun. The combo is technically more than two cards, but the third card doesn't matter. Using Zirilan and Sundial of the Infinite makes me smile every time. What's better than tutoring for an answer to a difficult board state, right into play, with haste, and keeping it after your turn's done? Not much!

My favorite two-card combo is Nath of the Gilt-Leaf (commander) with Sadistic Hypnotist. It's a pseudo-infinite combo that empties each of your opponents' hands without automatically winning the game. It creates some cool topdeck moments and gives your opponents a story to tell for the times when they're able to claw their way back for a win.

—Wes

Nobody really likes their entire hand to be discarded (exception: dredge players), so expect this combo to create a little friction. However, that's all it does. Limiting options isn't a surefire win, especially in Commander.

Ooze Flux + Cathars' Crusade. With these enchantments in play it's easy to make and grow an army. Any creature will enter with a +1/+1 counter, then pay to make a 1/1 Ooze and put counters on both creatures. Repeat as mana allows.

I like the fact that you can scale the effect by taking each counter that the Crusade adds to make the Ooze tokens bigger or you can keep making 1/1 Ooze tokens and pump each other creature +1/+1, making them all bigger. For added synergy, include Protean Hydra and/or Doubling Season in your deck.

This is Theros

No, it isn't too early at all. Next week, we'll have a few decks built around both Anax and Cymede as well as Polukranos, World Eater, as shared by you (just in time for the Duel Decks: Heroes vs. Monsters release on Friday). We'll also have a kickass Theros preview we'll be devoted to using soon.

As for the week after, you can guess wildly from this week's feedback prompt: Which five creature cards would you include in an Orzhov (white-black) Commander deck?

Feedback via email

150-word limit to answer the question

One paragraph explanation for all the picks

Name and email required (non-personal information to be used in column)

Adam "Stybs" Styborski joined DailyMTG.com in 2009 to take over Serious Fun, before switching over to begin Command Tower in 2013. With his passion for Commander and community inclusion, you'll find plenty of opportunity each week to share your thoughts about everyone's favorite casual format.